Emily Dickinson

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Kosher
Average preparation
Not available

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  • “I wanted to finally write a note for this tea, as the book I’m reading now mentions Emily Dickinson —  when it isn’t mentioning Herman Melville anyway (the book is ‘Dayswork’ by Chris Bachelder and...” Read full tasting note
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From Simpson & Vail

Emily Dickinson was born on December 10th, 1830 and lived in a home that was central to Amherst political society thanks to her father and brothers. Growing up around powerful men prepared Dickinson for a life of the same, but society dictated that, as a woman, she was relegated to seemingly less meaningful ventures. Her anger at this slight comes across in her poetry and letters where she explored complex ideas of meaning and self whileRead more

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1 Tasting Note

81
4373 tasting notes

I wanted to finally write a note for this tea, as the book I’m reading now mentions Emily Dickinson —  when it isn’t mentioning Herman Melville anyway (the book is ‘Dayswork’ by Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel).  This tea always confuses me, as I forget if it is green tea or black tea.  The package doesn’t say, the website doesn’t say.  Then I look at the leaf and it LOOKS like a black tea.  But then I brew it and it’s green tea.  So I finally hand wrote that it’s ‘green’ on the package so I actually remember.  But it’s a good tea!  Lots of florals!  It’s older now, so I’m sure it was much better before.  But a cold winter day calls for a floral tea.    It also might be better when I don’t brew it like a black tea.

edited to add: OH it looks like Cameron B updated the steepster page to say ‘green tea’, so there you go. :D Should have checked steepster.

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